Baltimore Sun

‘The whole package’

McDonogh’s Kate Levy the Player of the Year

- By Glenn Graham

Here are The Baltimore Sun’s All-Metro girls soccer teams for the 2023 season.

Player of the Year

Kate Levy, McDonogh, senior, midfielder

With the Eagles in need of the all-important first goal in the Interschol­astic Athletic Associatio­n of Maryland A Conference championsh­ip game against rival Archbishop Spalding, it was no surprise that Levy delivered it.

Just before the midway point of the first half, she got past two defenders to get in deep on the right side before finishing at the near post from 6 yards. Levy finished with two goals and two assists in a 6-1 win that led the No. 1 Eagles (16-0) to their first perfect season and 10th league championsh­ip. They finished as the country’s No. 2 ranked team.

“We were a really close-knit team having everybody back and adding some freshmen and that led us to a lot of success on and off the field,” Levy said. “We were excited to see each other every day and I think that showed in our play. When you’re having fun, you play better.

“I think that assisting on a goal is as important as scoring goals. Sharing the ball and playing good soccer is so satisfying and as a captain, I always wanted to make sure to help my teammates succeed.”

All season, Levy, who led the team with 15 goals and 11 assists, was a constant with sensationa­l two-way play and a knack for thriving in key moments.

“Kate is the whole package,” McDonogh coach Harry Canellakis said. “On the field, she’s incredibly efficient as a goal scorer and with assists. And as a leader, she’s a model athlete in that she shows up every day, trains really hard and is really competitiv­e and great with her teammates.”

Also a standout in lacrosse, Levy, who was an All-Metro first-team midfielder for the Eagles’ IAAM A Conference title team as a junior, has committed to play that sport at North Carolina.

“This means a lot. I’ve played soccer all my life and this season and award is a great way to possibly end my career,” she said. “It’s really special because of my teammates. I couldn’t have done anything without them.”

and you can’t get into the hype too much.”

Coach John Harbaugh expects a smorgasbor­d for hardcore NFL fans, who live to break down tactics and matchups.

“I think football fans — real football fans — are going to look at this one and really be intrigued by all that,” he said. “They do so many good things. It’s a system that [49ers coach] Kyle [Shanahan] has built forth through the tradition of his dad [Mike Shanahan], and he’s taken it to another, even, place. He really has expanded it and evolved it in a great way, and he does it around his players. I mean, you’ve got five, probably, All-Pro skill guys on that offense, not to mention a really good offensive line and a Hall of Fame tackle.”

Asked to identify the greatest threat posed by the 49ers, Harbaugh replied: “How could I even pick one? There’s so many.”

As he alluded to, the daunting task begins with a 49ers offense that ranks third in the league in scoring, first in yards per play and first in FTN Fantasy’s defense-adjusted value over average (DVOA), a metric that breaks down every NFL play and compares a team’s performanc­e with a league-average baseline base on situation and opponent.

There is no segment of the field San Francisco cannot attack. Wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk has caught 40 passes beyond 10 yards, per Pro Football Focus. His partner, Deebo Samuel, has 35 receptions inside 10 yards but averages 9.4 yards after the catch. Running back Christian McCaffrey has caught just three passes beyond 10 yards but leads the team in receiving touchdowns with seven. George Kittle averages 15.7 yards per reception and is easily PFF’s highest-graded tight end.

“The way they’re able to make those guys interchang­eable parts is impressive,” Ravens defensive coordinato­r Mike Macdonald said.

Because he was the last player picked in the 2022 draft and because he’s working with an embarrassm­ent of riches, Purdy is sometimes dismissed as a “system quarterbac­k,”

Ravens corner back Marlon Humphrey tackles 49ers tight end George Kittle on Dec. 1, 2019, at M&T Bank Stadium. The teams meet again tonight.

but Ravens defenders brushed past that notion.

“I just think that’s not true, just from what I’ve seen,” safety Kyle Hamilton said. “He’s making every throw that you can make as a quarterbac­k. It’s on time, on target. He makes good decisions, he’s mobile, and he’s got a great cast around him at the same time.”

The Ravens have allowed fewer yards per attempt than any defense in the league, and just as the 49ers attack everywhere, they have defended every part of the field fairly well. Their coverage numbers are worst, however, against running backs (24th in DVOA) and tight ends (14th in DVOA), not the greatest recipe against McCaffrey and Kittle.

That said, don’t tell the Ravens they take a back seat in these matchups.

“I’m betting on us 10 out of 10 times, 11 if you want to add one,” linebacker Roquan Smith said. “I think they have a lot of weapons and really good distributo­r in Purdy, who can get it out to those guys. They definitely

have a lot of weapons, but so do we. I like our team versus any team.”

Smith’s lateral speed along with that of his linebackin­g partner, Patrick Queen, will be essential against McCaffrey and Samuel as will Hamilton’s unusual length and physicalit­y from the nickel spot.

The Ravens will also look to disrupt Purdy with their multi-pronged rush. He has thrown well against blitzes, but his PFF passing grade drops from an excellent 91.1 when he’s kept clean to 58.4 when he’s under pressure.

The 49ers’ efficiency extends to their running game, where McCaffrey averages 5.3 yards per carry with 13 scores. Again, it’s difficult for defenses to focus on one spot; though the Pro Bowl running back does most of his damage going left, he’s efficient going both up the middle (6.4 yards per carry, per PFF) and outside the tackle (5.4 yards per carry).

The Ravens, meanwhile, rank just 14th in success rate against power runs and 20th in the percentage of runs they stuff at the line of scrimmage, according to DVOA creator Aaron Schatz.

For all their offensive weapons, the 49ers have just as many stars on defense, led by All-Pro edge rusher Nick Bosa, All-Pro inside linebacker Fred Warner and two of the best interior pass rushers in the league, Arik Armstead and Javon Hargrave. They’ll go at the Ravens’ battered tackles, Ronnie Stanley and Morgan Moses, who have ceded snaps to Patrick Mekari and Daniel Faalele in recent weeks. Stanley struggled to plant on his injured right knee last Sunday, allowing seven pressures on 26 pass-blocking snaps, per PFF, before he left to be examined for a possible concussion. Bosa will be at least as difficult an assignment as the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars’ Josh Allen, who did much of that damage against Stanley.

“Morgan and Ronnie have battled through a lot of bumps and bruises and nicks here and there, and they’ve fought through it,” offensive coordinato­r Todd Monken said. “We’ve had to deal with other fronts, and this is just another one of those challenges. They do a great job up front, they’re awfully well-coached and they’re very talented. We’ll have our work cut out for us, just like we did last week.”

San Francisco is more vulnerable to the run, but the Ravens just lost the top big-play threat from their backfield when rookie Keaton Mitchell suffered a season-ending knee injury.

Jackson, of course, is the true centerpiec­e of their running attack and the playmaker who will present just as many headaches for the 49ers — “He really is good at whatever they try to do,” Shanahan said — as San Francisco’s stars present to the Ravens.

That’s why the eyes of the football world will be on this matchup, which could be reprised in the Super Bowl.

Harbaugh knows how good the 49ers are but has also developed a deep appreciati­on for his team’s adaptabili­ty to each opponent and each game situation.

“That’s the thing about this team; it’s a very mature team, and I think they understand the challenge in front of them, and they understand their opponent, and they understand themselves,” he said.

 ?? KIM HAIRSTON/STAFF ?? McDonogh senior midfielder Kate Levy is The Baltimore Sun All-Metro girls soccer Player of the Year.
KIM HAIRSTON/STAFF McDonogh senior midfielder Kate Levy is The Baltimore Sun All-Metro girls soccer Player of the Year.
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